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Wednesday, November 26, 2025
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Add GBV to curriculums

publish time

26/11/2025

publish time

26/11/2025

Add GBV to curriculums

Many people around the world live with fear, silence, or pressure because of violence that targets them for who they are. This is what we call gender based violence, and it remains one of the most serious problems in our communities today. It affects women, men, and children in every place and at every age. It can happen at home, at work, in public, and even in school. Sometimes it appears in clear ways, but many times it begins with small actions that people ignore.

A joke that hurts someone, a comment that makes a girl uncomfortable, or pressure on a boy to act in a way that he does not want. These moments create the space where bigger harm can grow. One of the strongest tools we have to stop this problem is education. When children learn the meaning of respect, kindness, and safety at a young age, they grow into adults who understand the value of dignity for themselves and others. Schools play a major role in this. They are not just places to learn subjects. They are places where students learn how to treat each other, how to communicate, and how to build healthy relationships.

A school that teaches these values can prevent many problems long before they begin. Teaching about gender based violence should not be limited to a single lesson. It should be part of the wider learning environment. Students should understand what healthy behavior looks like. They should know how to set boundaries and how to protect themselves. They should feel confident speaking up when something feels wrong. They should also learn that violence can take many forms. It can be physical harm, emotional pressure, or words that slowly break someone down.

When students are taught these things, they are more aware and more able to support one another. This education helps everyone. Boys learn that strength is shown through respect, not control. Girls learn that they deserve safety and support.

Teachers gain the tools to help their students. Parents understand how to guide their children at home. When all of these groups work together, the entire community becomes safer and more united. Stopping gender based violence takes time and real effort, but it starts in the classroom. When schools teach respect and equality, they shape a generation that believes in safety for all. And that is the future we all want.

By Nasser Al-Hajeri